On the enjoyment of music
Abstract
Zu Beginn seiner Tätigkeit an der Hamline University hielt Krenek einen Vortrag, der sich mit Unterhaltung vs. Genuß („entertainment“ vs. „enjoyment“) in Bezug auf Neue Musik auseinandersetzt. Die häufig bemühte Unterscheidung zwischen Hören und Zuhören („hearing“ und „listening“) benutzt Krenek hier als Brücke zum bewussten kreativen Prozess der aktiven Musikrezeption, der notwendigerweise für den Genuß von Neuer Musik von den Zuhörenden aufgebracht werden müsste. Dass dies auch in der Vergangenheit nicht selbstverständlich aufbracht wurde, illustriert Krenek am Beispiel von zeitgenössischen Reaktionen auf Beethovens Eroica-Symphonie.
ON
THE
ENJOYMENT
OF
MUSIC(Address given at Bridgman Hall, Hamline University, October 5, 1942)
When music, or any art for that matter is being discussed nowadays, you
are bound to hear sooner or later someone impatiently throw in the phrase: Stop
fiddling while
Now if we are not to be compared to the crazy Tyrant of
One may well ask the question whether so much entertainment is justified
at a time when death and destruction are raging all over the world and human
suffering is increasing every minute beyond any measure held tolerable only a
short while ago. And yet, the providers of entertainment are hardly criticized
in earnest, since they managed to make people believe that entertainment is
necessary for the maintenance of morale. It is rather those engaged in serious
artistic endeavors who are under fire; because their activities do not furnish
enough entertainment. In terms of the story which I mentioned before,
It may be true that someone who expects mere entertainment will be dis- appointed when listening to real music. He will not be able to enjoy it. Now how can we tell entertainment from enjoyment? I would venture that the former is the result of a predominantly passive attitude on the part of the subject, whereas the latter is due to a highly active one. We may well be entertained by
On The Enjoyment of Music -- Page 2.popular songs and dance music, because it follows simple conventional patterns and uses but a few primitive relationships between standardized elements. Its emotional content is likewise simple, as it covers only a few typical situations and reactions of the human soul, such as dreams coming true when the moon is blue, and the like. There is nothing wrong with that, and I like myself to hear once in a while some skilfully handled swing tune. In order to get hold of the essential values of such an offering, we don't need to pay much attention to it. We just sit back and let it happen.
It would, however, be a great mistake if we would approach any kind of music in this frame of mind. Entertainment music is but one district in the vast realm of the art, quantitatively one of the largest, to be sure, but by no means a very distinguished one. Now if we enter the region of more highly organized music, we will have to change our attitude from passive hearing to active listen- ing, or else we will not get hold of the substance which is offered. If a swing record is played, I hear it without listening to it, and that may be enough in order to be entertained by it. If I hear a symphony, I must listen to it, or else I will not enjoy it.
It is obvious that the difference between hearing and listening is ex- pressed in the amount of attention devoted to the phenomenon. Now what is it pre- cisely to what we should pay attention in order to enjoy music. It is no more and no less than the musical process itself. Actually it should be easier to enjoy music than any other art, because music does not refer to anything but itself, while other arts usually involve extraneous subject matters. In point of fact most people are so used to thinking in terms of tangible subject matters that they have trouble in enjoying an art that is peculiarly free from such matters, like music.
And yet, the musical process, although apparently self-sustained and without tangible reference to outside affairs, is extremely significant of the highest aspirations of mankind. In short, the work of art which deserves the distinction of being called a masterpiece is a manifestation of breath-taking beauty as it holds the principles of freedom and order in perfect balance - nay, even integrates those principles so that freedom appears as the most satis- factory form of order, and order as the truest guardian of freedom. What happier state could mankind ever reach on this earth short of inheriting the kingdom of heaven than such an integration of freedom and order? And does it not seem essential to comprehend the prophecies of this most desirable consummation as they are laid down in the works of the great artists?
Now what should we do in order to comprehend the message of music? There may be some among you who are able to grasp it immediately, without any further preparation. We call such persons instinctively musical. They feel themselves from the outset attracted to music and live in its medium almost without knowing it. But there are infinitely many more who are able to avail themselves of exactly the same spiritual enjoyment, provided they make a little effort to that effect. The effort consists in no more than acquiring some knowledge and ex- perience of the inner workings of the musical process. You should become able to see the principle of freedom at work in the tremendous wealth and variety of musical ideas of all shapes and descriptions lavishly spread over the music of many centuries, and you should become able to evaluate the action of the prin- ciple of order which organizes those ideas in an amazing network of innumeralbe relationships and welds them into a logically coherent whole.
On
The
Enjoyment
of
Music-- Page 3.
Think of music as if you were watching a game. Nobody would deny that the real satisfaction in looking at a game derives from your knowing the rules. If I watch a football game without knowing the rules, I can still be pleased by the exhibition of physical power and skill. I may be entertained by the jumps and runs of the players, but probably not for long, and you will be quick in pointing out to me that I missed the essential point. It is the same with music. If you can't follow the complexity of the musical process, you may be agreeably touched by some detail here and there, a little phrase of the melody which re- minds you of something familiar, a few nice chords, an interesting instrumental combination, and the like. But you will soon get tired of such disconnected stimuli, and your neighbor who knows better will pity you because you can't par- take of his thrilling experience of the whole work.
I know that some people will be inclined to follow me so far and say: all right, we are ready to invest that much effort in the acknowledged master- pieces, since we are sure of what we get into the bargain, but please let us alone with this so-called new music which is either downright ugly, or else so compli- cated that it does not pay to try to get it. In many cases this attitude to- wards contemporary music is not only insulting, but incomprehensible. Everybody wants to see new movies, to read now books, to watch new plays in the theatre, and he would feel frustrated if nothing new in these fields were offered. Only with music it is quite the opposite. A new composition is introduced in the concert programs only very rarely and with extreme caution, and the manager stands by in fear and trembling, figuring out how many customers his daring action may turn away from the box office. I suppose it will happen every now and then that in reading a book of more than entertainment character you will hit upon a passage the meaning of which may not be at once entirely clear. I don't think that in such a case you will throw away the book and resolve to read from now on only those books which you have read and understood as a child. You will neither decide that you don't understand English, nor that the book is not written in English. Yet, this is precisely what most people do when they fail to grasp the meaning of a new musical work. They either say that they are not musical and that they don't understand music - these are the modest and reasonable people who can easily be brought to adopt a less defeatist attitude. Or they say that what they heard was no music, and that they would from now on listen only to what they had heard a hundred times before. These are the hopeless and malignant cases. Why is it that music is rarely given another chance? If you don't understand a passage in a book, you probably read it a second time, maybe you turn back a few pages in order to get more clarity from the context of the whole, you look up unfamiliar terms in a dictionary, in short you make some effort in order to discover the meaning of the passage. Why do you expect only music to go down into your system like a coca cola? I assure you there is nothing like the difference between the first and the second hearing of a new piece of music. The first hearing may frequently leave you disappointed and restless, because the newness of the sounds prevents you from realizing the context. Each detail is surprising, even baffling, and they seem to follow each other without logical connection, because they don't obey a predictable pattern. The second time you are already prepared to expect such and such things to happen at certain places, and your attention turns automatically to what goes on between these expected landmarks. You discover the connecting lines, you begin to realize that things happen according to plan and with necessity; in other words, you experience the logic of the process, and that is where your enjoyment begins.
On
The
Enjoyment
of
Music-- Page 4.
Do not think that the classical music which many people like to hold
against the new one as a perfect example of unquestionable beauty has been dif-
ferent in this respect from our music at the time when the classical masters were
contemporary, or modern composers. For the enlightenment of reluctant and
skeptical souls and for the entertainment of the better disposed ones, I like to
read you a little gem from my files, concerning the
Those gentlemen probably were quite respectable practitioners of their
trade. They probably had taken all the required courses in the conservatory,
they had made the required social contacts in order to get comfortably settled,
and they were performing the services required by their contracts. And yet they
managed to be remembered by posterity as outstanding dunces, for in order to
partake of the essential values of our civilization and so to contribute to their
maintenance and growth, it is not sufficient to do the required work, it is neces-
sary to put in some extra effort. It is easy to understand that only such extra
efforts have made our civilization into something to be proud of and worthy of
being defended against destruction. If nobody had done more than that which was
immediately necessary and indispensable, we would intellectually never have risen
above the level of the caveman. It was required of
On
The
Enjoyment
of
Music-- Page 5.
nowadays are ready to do. He will have to stop considering art as an embellish- ment of life, something which you can take or leave; in short, he will have to stop expecting entertainment; he will have to work for enjoyment.
This attitude requires enthusiasm, and enthusiasm has come into disre- pute during these last years. The enthusiastic person is believed to be an easy prey for demagogues who know how to play on the keyboard of quickly aroused emotions. Of course if we consider the goose-stepping victims of the dictators as being driven into their heart-rending foolishness by enthusiasm, we would rightly have none of it. But believe me, who have seen these youngsters in the process of becoming enchanted by the Pied Piper, that they fell for him precisely because they were enthusiastic about nothing. Religion, Philosophy, Literature, Art, Music - nothing meant enough to them to give their lives a center of gravity which would withstand the attrition of temporal vicissitudes. It was not enthusiasm which made them march to the poisonous tune, but despair caused by the lack of enthusiasm, and camouflaged afterwards to look like enthusiasm. Only one who does not identify himself with any cause will eventually lend his ear to the godless and fake promise of a Paradise on Earth. Time and again I felt as if some of the young people whom I met were afraid of becoming too deeply involved in the subject in which they seemed to be really interested. I don't see how anyone can ever be too deeply interested in something in which he is interested at all. Certainly, a wide horizon and a general understanding of the whole of our civilization are fine things, but I have yet to see the person who did not pay for treating his field of special interest with lukewarm feelings by remain- ing deplorably ignorant of all the rest.
I know it is neither original nor promissing to plead nowadays for special
efforts. We are daily overwhelmed with the most urgent requests to put in extra
work at every corner. As far as music is concerned, we have at least not to ponder
very long about where the extra effort starts, because the whole thing is a very
special exertion of the human mind, and has always been one, even in times of
peace. However, it is a comforting though paradoxical thought that only those
things which are unnecessary for the maintenance of physical life make the main-
tenance of physical life worthwhile. Thus we shall not stop fiddling while
The work of these fire fighters is certainly most necessary, and we shall
hold them in very high esteem for their courage, self-denial and determination.
And yet, as time goes by, it is bound to fade away, and the great deeds of the
field-marshals which seem so all-important at the time of their performance be-
come a matter of laborious historical research. The tremendous achievements of
On
the
Enjoyment
of
Music-- Page 6.
How much do we know, in terms of immediate experience, of the works of